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Topic: BioLite Stove (Read 4488 times)

I am thinking of replacing my MSR with a BioLite stove. I have seen many opinions and a few factual reviews, but not from the bicycle touring community (usually back packers). So, has anyone used it biolitestove.com, and what do you think?

My initial thoughts...1. kinda big/heavy2. Smaller/lighter than MSR with fuel3. Safer than liquid fuel4. Can recharge bicycle light batteries (gooooood)5. what if it breaks?6. Same cost as new MSR.

I have a friend currently on tour and this is her first trip with the Biolite stove. Here is a direct quote from her email I received today: " The new stove works great." I'll get more details when she finishes in a couple of weeks and post them here.

A fascinating device demonstrating the best entrepreneurial passions. Makes the ol Sierra Zzip stove look primitive but it's still a remarkable, and remarkably cheap, efficient cooker. For many cycling tourists, weight can trump all other perceived and real benefits of a cooking system so you will put your heart into this decision. Hope the company succeeds.

A really neat idea. Plan on adding a windscreen/pot holder, and do not expect too much from the charger. The iPad 2 takes 24 Watt-hours, the new iPad takes 42. That's 12 hours plus for a full charge on an iPad 2, or 21 hours plus for the new iPad.

But what a great conversation piece! Let us know what you think if you try one.

The only downside I can see is that it's often difficult to find any kind of firewood or kindling near established, popular campsites. Even the people who bring generators, satellite dishes and TVs in their 32' RVs to a national park want to have a campfire every night, and a fair few don't want to pay for firewood from the camp store (too expensive!). As a result, many of these are stripped clean of brush and downed limbs. (The Biolite looks like it'd have trouble handling the large firewood that is being sold...)

The only downside I can see is that it's often difficult to find any kind of firewood or kindling near established, popular campsites.

It may not be as bad as you think. I saw a guy using a home made stove kind of like the zip stove and he was able to cook dinner with not much more than a pocket of twigs. You can usually find at least that at most camp sites and if you had to you could pick up some along the road before you get to camp.

The charging idea is pretty cool, but I suspect it is minimal enough to not be worth the weight and bother of keeping a fire going long enough to really charge anything.

Personally I kind of like the idea of solid fuel, but would just as soon have a lighter stove with no charger. I am so used to my pop can stoves that I am unlikely to change any time soon. It would be nice to not have to find place to buy alcohol and then to carry it. Then there is the issue of sooty pots with a wood burner...

A really neat idea. Plan on adding a windscreen/pot holder, and do not expect too much from the charger. The iPad 2 takes 24 Watt-hours, the new iPad takes 42. That's 12 hours plus for a full charge on an iPad 2, or 21 hours plus for the new iPad.But what a great conversation piece! Let us know what you think if you try one.Fred

That's for a completely empty iPad battery. I think this thing is intended for nothing more than mere trickles; you're just topping off your smaller devices like a headlamp or maybe a less than super smart phone. IIRC, even cooking for four or six people only meant the gas or alcohol stove was running for 30 minutes or so. but...Anyone hauling an iPad isn't concerned with how many 2x4s they'll burn to keep it charged. .

The family version of the stove deals with some serious BTU-to-mW conversion, though.

That's for a completely empty iPad battery. I think this thing is intended for nothing more than mere trickles; you're just topping off your smaller devices like a headlamp or maybe a less than super smart phone. IIRC, even cooking for four or six people only meant the gas or alcohol stove was running for 30 minutes or so. but...Anyone hauling an iPad isn't concerned with how many 2x4s they'll burn to keep it charged. .

The family version of the stove deals with some serious BTU-to-mW conversion, though.

I was thinking of being able to charge my head light/tail light, ya think that will be enough power for the few AA's?

It's straightforward arithmetic. Look at the milliAmpere-hour rating of the batteries. Multiply by 1.2 Volts to get their energy capacity in milli-Watt hours. Divide by 1000 to see it as Watt-hours. Guessing at 80% charging efficiency, divide by 0.80.

It's straightforward arithmetic. Look at the milliAmpere-hour rating of the batteries. Multiply by 1.2 Volts to get their energy capacity in milli-Watt hours. Divide by 1000 to see it as Watt-hours. Guessing at 80% charging efficiency, divide by 0.80.

This is a good ball-park figure, perhaps too optimistic on the charging efficiency and you ability to keep it going at max.

Fred

So with a few handfulls of twigs and a couple hours I can ensure my safety lights will have power! I like that idea. Now to find a scale and see how much fuel weighs the same as the stove for comparison.